Anonymous wrote:DS is like this and does have ADHD. He will also listen to audio books of one book while reading a different one! But like a PP said, his reading level is extraordinary. They stopped measuring it at the end of last year because he’s off the charts. Just absolutely loves books. His writing and vocabulary is also very strong as a result.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That was me! When I didn’t have books I would read the cereal box, mail, toiletries over and over again.
My mom constantly nagged me to stop reading. I don’t have any advice except just make sure you are providing great reading material.
Fwiw I am in my 30s now and have a pretty normal life.
OP here - YES! She reads everything. Labels on bottles including the ingredients listed on shampoo. Medication instructions from CVS. Cardboard packaging. Thank you. This made me feel better. We just made an appointment with our pediatrician for insomnia she's been experiencing for several months. She can't seem to turn off her brain at night. Kind of like she can't turn off the reading. Should be interesting to see where this goes.
Anonymous wrote:That was me! When I didn’t have books I would read the cereal box, mail, toiletries over and over again.
My mom constantly nagged me to stop reading. I don’t have any advice except just make sure you are providing great reading material.
Fwiw I am in my 30s now and have a pretty normal life.
Anonymous wrote:This is my kid too. Possible me she has inattentive ADHD (other signs and genetic component) but it means she’s reading at a 12th grade level at 9. I often have to physically remove the book from her hands. We have a no reading at meals rule and I try to enforce a no books in the bathroom rule. We also try to get outside as much as possible.
There are other signs that we may be dealing with inattentive ADHD, but at this point it isn't affecting her socially or academically. It's just driving everyone nuts!